Hacking interferes with murder probe

Britain’s voracious tabloids may have hit a new low: The News of the World is facing claims that it hacked into a missing 13-year-old’s phone messages, possibly hampering a police inquiry into her disappearance.

Milly Dowler was found murdered months later and the claim that her messages were tampered with has horrified Britons.

Major advertisers - including Ford UK - have pulled their ads from the paper, which is Britain’s top-selling Sunday newspaper, owned by Rupert Murdoch’s News International.

Britons are used to seeing their tabloid press harass royals, sports stars and celebrities, constantly eavesdropping and paying even the most tangential sources for information about stars’ sex lives and drug problems.

But the latest hacking case was met with revulsion Tuesday from everyone from British Prime Minister David Cameron to movie stars to people who commented on Twitter.

“(It is) shocking that someone could do this, knowing that the police were trying to find this person and trying to find out what had happened," Cameron said while on a trip to Afghanistan.

The case has refocused the spotlight on the already tainted News of The World. It also comes as Murdoch is trying to engineer the politically sensitive, multibillion-dollar takeover of broadcaster BSkyB in Britain.

Milly’s disappearance in 2002 while walking home from school in Surrey, south of London, transfixed Britain until her decomposing body was found six months later in the woods by mushroom pickers.

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While police were pursuing all leads and Milly’s parents were making dramatic appeals for information, a private investigator working for the News of the World allegedly hacked into her mobile phone, listened to her messages and even deleted some to make room for possible new ones.

Mark Lewis, a lawyer representing Milly’s parents, said on Tuesday the suspected hacking may have hampered the police investigation. He plans to sue the tabloid for its interference.

It was never determined how long Milly was alive after being abducted but the tabloid’s actions reportedly came soon after her disappearance.

Police realised some messages had been deleted, giving them and Milly’s parents false hope that she was still alive.

“It is distress heaped upon tragedy to learn that the News of the World had no humanity at such a terrible time," Lewis said.

“The fact that they were prepared to act in such a heinous way that could have jeopardised the police investigation and give them false hope is despicable."

He said executives at the newspaper should take responsibility and step down.

Serial killer Levi Bellfield was convicted of Milly’s slaying two weeks ago. He was already serving a life sentence for two other murders.

Cameron condemned the grotesque press intrusion and called for an immediate inquiry. MPs called for an emergency debate on the phone hacking on Wednesday.

Glenn Mulcaire, a private investigator who earlier served prison time for helping the tabloid hack into mobile phones, apologised on Tuesday for any interference with police inquiries.

In a statement in the Guardian newspaper, he said he knew he “pushed the limits ethically" and said he was sorry to all who had been “hurt or upset" by his activity.

Mulcaire and reporter Clive Goodman were jailed in 2007 for hacking into the phone messages of Buckingham Palace officials.

Meanwhile, pressure mounted on Tuesday for the resignation of Rebekah Brooks, editor of the tabloid at the time of the alleged hacking and now a top Murdoch executive in the UK.

There were also signs of a developing boycott, with Ford UK announcing it was pulling ads from the News of the World.

Grocery chain Tesco and Virgin Media both said they were considering withdrawing ads as well.

Prominent Britons railed against the tabloid.

“Newspapers were using phone hacking on a widespread and industrial basis ... (with) the apparent collusion of parts of the Metropolitan Police," actor Hugh Grant told BBC radio.

Grant said successive British governments had “winked" at the illegal practice because they needed Murdoch’s support to get elected.

Ed Miliband, leader of the opposition Labour Party, said he was “horrified that the grieving parents of an abducted child were made to go through further torture that somehow she was alive because her voice mails were being retrieved or deleted".

Miliband called the events “a stain" on British journalism.

Brooks, a Murdoch confidante, refused to step down, telling her staff in an email on Tuesday that she had no knowledge of the alleged hacking.

“We were all appalled and shocked when we heard about these allegations," Brooks wrote.

“I am sickened that these events are alleged to have happened. Not just because I was editor of the News of the World at the time, but if the accusations are true, the devastating effect on Milly Dowler’s family is unforgivable."

She said she had written to the girl’s parents promising to fully co-operate with investigators.

News International spokesman Simon Greenberg said Brooks still had Murdoch’s full confidence.

He said News of the World executives met on Tuesday with Scotland Yard investigators to discuss the new allegations

“We’re in a fully, fully co-operative mode," he said.

Britain has strict privacy laws, and in recent years judges have granted dozens of public figures gag orders to prevent media from publishing the details of their private lives.

But those gag orders have come under increasing criticism and are becoming obsolete.

Last month, Twitter users “outed" soccer star Ryan Giggs as the celebrity who was granted an injunction preventing media from publishing allegations that he’d had an affair with a reality television contestant.

After years of denials, the News of the World has admitted to hacking into the mobile phone voice mails of many celebrities and sports stars and offered cash settlements to some victims.

Two people have served time for their roles in the case, and five more people have been arrested since fresh police investigation began in January.

The paper also faces dozens of lawsuits stemming from the illegal hacking.

Former deputy prime minister John Prescott and actor Jude Law are among those believed to have been hacked by the tabloid, which has already reached a STG100,000 ($A150,000) cash settlement with actress Sienna Miller, Law’s former girlfriend.

And Sir Richard Branson said he’d been caught up in phone hacking allegations.

“The police contacted me a couple days ago to say my various phones have been accessed," he told reporters during a visit to Brisbane on Wednesday (AEST).